Our style guide for writing HTML is based on the Code Guide by @mdo.
- Syntax
- HTML5 doctype
- Language attribute
- Character encoding
- IE compatibility mode
- CSS and JavaScript includes
- Practicality over purity
- Attribute order
- Boolean attributes
- IDs, classes and data attributes
- Reducing markup
- JavaScript generated markup
- Use soft tabs with four spaces
- Nested elements should be indented once (four spaces).
- Always use double quotes, never single quotes, on attributes.
- Don’t include a trailing slash in self-closing elements—the HTML5 spec says they’re optional.
- Don’t omit optional closing tags (e.g.
</li>or</body>).
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>Page title</title>
</head>
<body>
<img src="images/company-logo.png" alt="Company">
<h1 class="hello-world">Hello, world!</h1>
</body>
</html>Enforce standards mode and more consistent rendering in every browser possible with this simple doctype at the beginning of every HTML page.
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
</head>
</html>From the HTML5 spec:
Authors are encouraged to specify a lang attribute on the root html element, giving the document’s language. This aids speech synthesis tools to determine what pronunciations to use, translation tools to determine what rules to use, and so forth.
Read more about the lang attribute in the spec.
Head to Sitepoint for a list of language codes.
<html lang="en-us">
<!-- ... -->
</html>Quickly and easily ensure proper rendering of your content by declaring an explicit character encoding. When doing so, you may avoid using character entities in your HTML, provided their encoding matches that of the document (generally UTF-8).
<head>
<meta charset="UTF-8">
</head>Internet Explorer supports the use of a document compatibility <meta> tag to specify what version of IE the page should
be rendered as. Unless circumstances require otherwise, it’s most useful to instruct IE to use the latest supported
mode with edge mode.
For more information, read this awesome Stack Overflow article.
<meta http-equiv="X-UA-Compatible" content="IE=Edge">Per HTML5 spec, typically there is no need to specify a type when including CSS and JavaScript files as text/css and text/javascript are their respective defaults.
HTML5 spec links
<!-- External CSS -->
<link rel="stylesheet" href="code-guide.css">
<!-- In-document CSS -->
<style>
/* ... */
</style>
<!-- JavaScript -->
<script src="code-guide.js"></script>Strive to maintain HTML standards and semantics, but not at the expense of practicality. Use the least amount of markup with the fewest intricacies whenever possible.
HTML attributes should come in this particular order for easier reading of code.
classid,namedata-*src,for,type,href,valuetitle,altrole,aria-*
Classes make for great reusable components, so they come first. Ids are more specific and should be used sparingly (e.g., for in-page bookmarks), so they come second.
<a class="..." id="..." data-toggle="modal" href="#">
Example link
</a>
<input class="form-control" type="text">
<img src="..." alt="...">A boolean attribute is one that needs no declared value. XHTML required you to declare a value, but HTML5 has no such requirement.
For further reading, consult the WhatWG section on boolean attributes:
The presence of a boolean attribute on an element represents the true value, and the absence of the attribute represents the false value.
If you must include the attribute’s value, and you don’t need to, follow this WhatWG guideline:
If the attribute is present, its value must either be the empty string or [...] the attribute’s canonical name, with no leading or trailing whitespace.
In short, don’t add a value.
<input type="text" disabled>
<input type="checkbox" value="1" checked>
<select>
<option value="1" selected>1</option>
</select>Always use classes for styles. Avoid using IDs. Use data attributes when JavaScript funcionality is involved.
<a class="...">
I am a styled link
</a>
<form class="..." data-js-component data-component-parameter="...">
I am used somewhere in JavaScript
</form>Whenever possible, avoid superfluous parent elements when writing HTML. Many times this requires iteration and refactoring, but produces less HTML. Take the following example:
<!-- Not so great -->
<span class="avatar">
<img src="...">
</span>
<!-- Better -->
<img class="avatar" src="...">Writing markup in a JavaScript file makes the content harder to find, harder to edit, and less performant. Avoid it whenever possible.